The Lost Saucer is an ABC television series produced by Sid and Marty Krofft, starring Ruth Buzzi and Jim Nabors as hapless aliens who take a boy and his babysitter with them on their flying saucer. It aired new episodes from September to December 1975, with reruns continuing until December 1976, first under its own banner, then as part of The Krofft Supershow. It ran in daily syndication from 1978 to 1985 as part of the "Krofft Superstars" package with six other Krofft series.
Premise
Fi (Ruth Buzzi) and Fum (Jim Nabors) are two friendly time-travelling androids from Planet ZR-3 and the year 2369 who land their flying saucer on present-day (1975) Earth. They good-naturedly invite a young boy Jerry (Jarrod Johnson) and his babysitter Alice (Alice Playten) to look in the interior of their spacecraft.
As onlookers begin to gather, though, the two androids become nervous about attracting attention and abruptly take off with Jerry and Alice. The flying saucer is able to travel through time, but the controls which allow the androids to specify an exact date are damaged, thus preventing the androids from returning Jerry and Alice to their rightful time and place.
The foursome encounter various adventures as the two androids (who bicker and argue incessantly with each other, neither seeming competent with the ship's controls) try to return Jerry and Alice home or to return to their own home on Planet ZR-3 where they hoped to make repairs with the help of their lookalike creators Doctor Locker (Nabors) and Professor Pringle. (Buzzi portrayed Pringle dressed as Buzzi's purse-wielding spinster character Gladys from Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In.) The adventures are usually set on Earth (or an Earth colony) either in the distant past or in the distant future hundreds (or even thousands) of years hence. Episodes often were blatant social commentaries dealing with extremes such as a world where names (and faces) were replaced with numbers, where machines were outlawed due to a global energy shortage, or a city where the population had grown lazy and obese because robots perform all physical work.
Accompanying the foursome was a creature known as the Dorse (played by Larry Larsen), a half-dog, half-horse hybrid with the body of a large shaggy dog and the head of a small horse.
Themes
Each episode had a specific theme, usually a social or environmental one. "Fat Is Beautiful", for example, depicted a future in which people were grotesquely obese due to over-dependence on push-button conveniences, and leanness was in fact outlawed. In "Get a Dorse", two scientists kidnap the Dorse to use as a power source because the world's fuel supplies were finally used up.
Episodes
There were 16 original episodes produced for the 1975–76 season. The first six episodes were later rerun in the first half of The Krofft Supershows first season.
